NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Oil prices reached a record $50 a barrel Monday as Nigeria emerged as the latest focus for worries about supply in an already tight worldwide energy market.

The U.S. light crude November contract rose 36 cents a barrel in after-hours electronic trading to reach $50, its loftiest level in the 21 years of trade on the New York Mercantile Exchange, before pulling back to $49.80. The contract had settled for the session at $49.64, its highest-ever settlement, up 76 cents from Friday's close.

London Brent, the benchmark for European crude imports, settled 60 cents higher at $45.13, after hitting a new record of $46.28 a barrel.

In Washington, the Bush administration said it is closely monitoring crude prices, but spokesman Scott McClellan said the administration will not use the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to ease prices.

Investment bank Morgan Stanley said it now believes surging crude oil prices could reach as high as $61 a barrel.

"We now think that (U.S.) crude oil could reach $61 before a meaningful sell-off occurs," investment bank Morgan Stanley said in a report to its private clients. "Long-term price patterns point to even higher prices," the report added.

"All these factors create apprehension in the market and reinforce the view that we're on a knife's edge in terms of supply and demand," Daniel Hynes, industry analyst at ANZ Bank in Melbourne, told Reuters. "The uncertainties heighten the risk premium applied to this market."

Global supplies have risen strongly this year but are still straining to meet the fastest demand growth in 24 years. World crude output is close to its limit after many years when OPEC producers kept large volumes untapped.

The lack of a supply cushion has reinforced the view among some investors that oil near $50 is not overpriced, despite a 50 percent jump in crude prices since the start of the year.

"The market faces the prospect of years without sufficient flexibility or insulation from shocks during a period of extreme geopolitical stress," analyst Paul Horsnell of Barclays Capital told Reuters.

In Nigeria, rebels seeking political reforms in the impoverished oil-producing Niger Delta forced the closure by Royal Dutch/Shell of 30,000 barrels a day as a security precaution.

The militants, threatening output from the country that pumps 2.5 million barrels daily, said at the weekend they would seek to extend the uprising across the West African producer's entire southern delta oil region.

Separately, Nigeria already has been forced to cut back output from surge capacity to prevent long-term damage to its aging facilities -- the first sign that efforts by OPEC countries to quell prices by squeezing out extra output may not be sustainable.

Presidential Adviser on Petroleum Edmund Daukoru told Reuters that production was reduced 10 percent to base capacity of 2.25 million bpd in August. Nigeria had been pumping at surge capacity of up to 2.55 million bpd.

Uncertainty over supplies from Yukos, Russia's top exporter, also is supporting prices. Yukos last week trimmed deliveries to China.

In Saudi Arabia, clashes between security forces and suspected al Qaeda followers served as a reminder of the threat to stability in the world's biggest producer.

In Iraq, insurgents fired mortar bombs at the oil ministry building Saturday, causing minor damage but no injuries.

But Iraqi oil exports, temporarily at least, are as high as they have been since last year's U.S.-led invasion.

Iraqi pipelines have been the target of frequent sabotage attacks. But Monday deliveries resumed through the main northern liHne to Turkey after repairs from a bomb attack Sept 2. Southern exports were near full capacity.

Extra crude from OPEC, now pumping at a 25-year high, has failed to make any impact. The group produced 30.5 million bpd in September, the highest since 1979, tanker-tracking consultancy Petrologistics said Monday.